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Authors: Douglas Hulick

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Wolf stepped toward the door. “Bronze must, else why would he be here?”

I didn’t feel quite up to pointing out the gaping holes in this logic, so I let it pass. Instead, I moved over to my bed and scratched my neck. The sweat that had been there much of the
night had dried, leaving what felt like a thin, slimy film over my skin.

“And what if Degan refuses to recite those laws?” Never mind getting him to come back to Ildrecca in the first place. Or face the Order. Or even talk to me again, for that
matter.

“Then I shall recite them for him.”

“Are we talking about the same person here?” I said. “Because I don’t see Degan letting someone else do much of anything on his behalf if he doesn’t want it
done.”

Wolf showed his teeth. “That will be my concern.”

Now it was my turn to shiver. And I still didn’t feel reassured.

Chapter Twenty-four

D
espite being exhausted, or maybe because of it, I slept fitfully. Not because of the clatter and shouting of the rehearsal taking place in the
courtyard—that kind of thing was second nature to me from years spent living near the night cart routes in the lower parts of Ildrecca; rather, it was the occasional silences, in which the
squeak of a floorboard or a footstep in the hall could be heard, that caused me to crack my eyes and shift restlessly in bed.

At one point, I opened my eyes to see a dim figure moving about the room, and filled my hand with my knife before I was fully awake. But it was only Fowler, who gently pushed the blade aside and
whispered something about locks and loaves. I tried to ask her who the hell picked locks with bread, but was already falling back to sleep before I could get the words out.

When next I opened my eyes, the sunlight pushing in through the window had a distinctly horizontal slant to it, telling me it was late in the day. I rolled to the edge of my bed, gasped at the
pain the movement caused, and rolled back.

Cutters. Assassins. Fights in the dark. Right.

Maybe I’d just stay here for a bit.

I’d just settled back in and begun thinking about sending one of the innkeeper’s sons out for some pilgrim’s balm when Fowler said, “About time you woke up.”

I nearly leapt out of my bed, then stopped as a fresh wave of pain rolled through me. I groaned and looked off toward the other side of the room.

Fowler was seated on a stool, her back against the door, her arms folded across her chest. A ceramic teapot and an empty cup sat on the floor beside her, along with a partially eaten loaf of
bread.

I didn’t bother to ask how long she’d been there. I already knew.

“You didn’t have to stay,” I said as I slowly sat up.

“Yes, I did.”

“It’s not as if Wolf was going to come back.”

“Who gives a fuck about him coming back?” Fowler nodded at the room in general. “I needed to figure out how the bastard got past me the first time, and this was the quietest
place to think.”

“Right.” I swung my legs over the side of the bed and took a breath. This next bit was going to hurt. “So what did you figure out?”

“He had to have been here for hours—even before Degan arrived. My guess is he slipped in when I was busy setting up one of the Crows I recruited.”

“Seriously? He got in while you were putting out more eyes?”

“Don’t even start.”

“But you have to admit—”

“I don’t have to do anything, including not kill you.”

I covered the fledgling smile on my face by taking a deep breath and letting it out. Then another. I stood up.

It was worse than I expected.

“Oh, Angels!” I gasped.

“Serves you right.”

I didn’t respond. We’d gone over the security lapse last night, as well as my encounter with Fat Chair’s men. Any high ground I might have claimed about having found Wolf
inside my room had been washed away by Fowler pointing out just how lucky I was to have made it back at all. It had been hard to argue with her, but I’d managed it nonetheless. We were good
at nonetheless of late.

As for the
neyajin
, well, I’d left that part out. Given our encounter with the assassins in the tunnel, and given Fowler’s propensity to hold a grudge, I didn’t want
to tell her about their newfound interest in me. She’d clearly suspected something—we both knew I wasn’t good enough to fight my way past four Cutters with nothing more to show
for it than a collection of fresh bruises and a bad disposition—but for once fatigue had won out over stubbornness and I’d finally been able to beg off any further argument for the time
being.

I tilted my head, felt my neck pop, and then dipped my fingers into the pouch around my neck. It took all the willpower I could summon, but I made myself chafe the
ahrami
seed between
my palms rather than immediately slip it into my mouth. My sweat would help open up the flavor, and if I was going to feel this lousy, I at least wanted to be able to enjoy one tiny part of the
day.

“So how do you think Wolf got in?” I said.

“Short of climbing in through a window that’s too small for him? I have no idea. I had Crows working the roof and the yard, and an Oak sitting in the common room with an eye on the
stairs all night.”

“Back rooms?” I said. I rolled the seed to the tip of my fingers and set it in my mouth. A faint shudder went through me, and my shoulders started to relax. Not pilgrim’s balm,
but it would do. “Maybe the kitchen?”

“The innkeeper and his people say no, but I’m looking into it.” Fowler ran her hand along the back of her neck. “What I don’t understand,” she said, “is
why Wolf didn’t just step out into the hall when Degan was here. If he was listening in, then why not simply end the hunt? It’s not like there’ll be a better time for him to have
a face-to-face with Degan.”

“He thinks there will be,” I said. “He said this wasn’t the right time to approach Degan, what with Ivory Degan’s papers suddenly being in play.”

“And you believed him?”

“Hell, no. I think Wolf knew about the papers all along, or at least suspected. Degan said himself that Wolf is the expert on this. I think Wolf wants the laws and Degan together, and
doesn’t want to jeopardize his chances of getting both by playing his hand too early.”

“Which means Wolf could be playing any number of games.”

I nodded. “It’s even possible he wants to find Degan for the reasons he said, although I doubt that’s the full story. Short answer? I don’t know. All I do know is that I
stand a better chance of figuring out Wolf’s plan and helping Degan if I stay in the game instead of outside it. And that means continuing to dance to Wolf’s tune, at least for the
moment.”

“Even though Degan doesn’t want your help?”

“Even then.” Because, whether he liked it or not, I wasn’t going to leave him hanging, not again.

I peeled off my shirt and looked down at the bruises on my chest and arms. There weren’t enough visible to justify how sore I felt, which meant the rest were deep and likely wouldn’t
surface for a day or two yet. I grimaced at the thought.

Fowler shifted on the stool and cleared her throat. “I don’t suppose there’s any chance of talking him into helping us?”

“Degan made his position clear last night,” I said, tossing my shirt on the bed. I walked over to my travel chest and swung it open. “Asking now would only push him further
away when I need to bring him closer.”

“And keeping silent is supposed to help with that?”

“The last time he asked me to do something, I did the opposite,” I said. “I can’t imagine repeating that course of action will win me any further love.”

“But if you told him about the
Zakur
and the—”

Fowler was interrupted by a loud knocking on my door. Given how fast she sprang out of her seat, I guessed it had sounded right next to her ear.

I smiled. Good. Served her right.

I was opening my mouth to tell them to go away when the door latch rattled against the lock. Then the knock came again, along with a voice.

“Drothe?” It was Ezak. “You need to come downstairs. Now.”

I looked at Fowler. She raised an eyebrow and shook her head. No ideas.

I let my gaze drift over to the washstand. Water and soap and a washrag sat, waiting. Tempting.

Damn actors.

“Tell Tobin that I haven’t even—”

“It’s not Tobin,” said Ezak. “Nor is it the troupe.”

“Then what is it?”

A longer pause than I’d like. Then, “Just come. Now.”

There were two of them waiting downstairs, not counting Ezak: a cove that could have doubled as a sandstone pillar in his spare time, and an old woman. Except for them, the
inn’s common room was empty. Not even the owner was visible behind the bar.

No witnesses. Bad sign, that.

I stepped gingerly down off the last step. I hadn’t been able to find any spare lacings in my trunk, and so had simply slipped my feet into the laceless shoes and clomped my way down the
stairs. I’d briefly considered trying to shove my swollen, aching feet into my traveling boots, but one look at the dirt-covered, sweat-stiffened footwear had convinced me it wasn’t
worth the agony I would have experienced pulling them on. Now, seeing the situation in the common room, I was starting to wonder if something that allowed me the option of running wouldn’t
have been a better choice, pain be damned.

The woman was seated off to one side, a stemmed earthenware goblet before her on the table, its sides damp with condensation. She wore a simple veil, drawn down below her chin, along with a
beige head wrap over silvery hair and an off-white kaftan. The only color on her was a single ring on her left hand, gold set with a sky-blue sapphire the size of my front tooth. As for her right
hand, it sat in her lap—lame, if I had to guess, given the subtle slackness in her shoulder and the right side of her face.

I faced the woman and salaamed. It seemed like the smart thing to do. She gave nothing away as she inclined her head in turn.

Fowler, though, wasn’t feeling quite so diplomatic.

“Where the hell are my people?” she demanded, pushing past me. “And who the hell are you, anyhow?”

The woman turned a cool eye toward Fowler. “You mean the ones watching the inn? They left.”

“Why?”

“Because I told them to. Do you understand what this means?”

“Yeah, it means I’m going to—”

I grabbed Fowler and pulled her back. “We understand,” I said. I turned to Ezak. “Your people are all right?” The yard, I’d noticed, was empty as well.

“They’re in the stables,” he said. He looked over at the woman. “I should go to them.” She inclined her head again, and he left.

“Dammit, Drothe,” said Fowler as she twisted her arm free of my grip, “if you think I’m going to stand by and let some old—”

“What you’re going to do,” I said, stepping close and dropping my voice, “is shut the hell up and go out to the stables with Ezak. Now.”

“The fuck I—”

“No,” I snapped. “No arguments. Not this time. Not if you want the people you just recruited to keep breathing. Think: She cleared three blocks’ worth of Crows and Oaks
with a word. What the hell will happen if you take one more step toward her?”

Fowler ducked her head and glowered at the room in general. I kept my hands loose and open.

“Fowler . . . ?” I said.

A heel to the floor. Hard. “Dammit!” Then she was out the door and stalking across the yard.

I didn’t envy Tobin if he even so much as thought about opening his mouth.

I faced the woman and her human statue.

“She has fire,” she said, tracking the Oak Mistress’s progress through a window. “She’ll either burn up the world or burn herself out. I like her.” She turned
back to me. “We need to speak, you and I. Come here.”

I clomped-stepped over to her and took a seat. She leaned slowly to the side and looked under the table.

“You seem to be having trouble with your shoes,” she said.

“Really? I hadn’t noticed. Given how everything else has been going lately, they feel fine by comparison.”

The left side of her mouth twitched momentarily. “You know who I am?”

“I know you’re
Zakur
, if that’s what you mean. And that you’re high up in the organization. No one else could hush my people and clear out a place like this with
just one Arm at her back.”

“‘Arm’?” She looked back over her shoulder. “What do you think of that, Ubayd?”

The pillar rumbled.

“Well, I like it. You’re now my Arm.” She glanced down at her lap, then back up at me. “Seems especially poetic in my case, don’t you think?”

“I—”

“Be quiet. It was a rhetorical question.” She raised her glass, causing ice to clink against the side as she sipped at whatever was inside. The inn didn’t normally stock ice.
“We need to figure out what to do about you.”

I sat quietly and waited.

“Well?” she said after a moment.

“Oh, I’m sorry. I thought you’d already figured it out and were just waiting for me to say something so you could tell me to shut up.”

Her left eye narrowed to a slit. Her right tried to keep up but fell behind. I focused on the narrower of the two.

“No one likes a cocky Imperial.”

“I find they’re not fond of belligerent old Djanese women, either.” I leaned forward and placed my elbows on the table. “Look, I haven’t had my coffee—or any
of my other vices—yet, so I’ll be brief. You carry a lot of water around here. I get that, even without the walking obelisk behind you. And you wouldn’t have come to see me if you
didn’t know the kind of pull I have when I’m at home. So what say we stop pretending to be hard and get down to business?”

The man behind her grunted and settled a fist that looked to be almost half the size of my head on his belt, putting it within easy reach of my face.

The woman didn’t seem to notice. Instead, she stared at me for a long moment before finally shaking her head. Ubayd’s hand uncurled but didn’t fall away.

“My name is Jaida bint Iyab Bakr al-Modussa al-Hirim,” she said, “although most people on the street call me Mama Left Hand. You’re called Drothe?”

“I am.”

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